Hah, I might not be the best to explain Amiga history, but I’ll do my best :) Fish disks were the main way to distribute public domain, open source, shareware etc. before the internet was wide-spread. People would send Fred Fish software, and he’d compile them into individual disks that people would copy. Magazines would have lots of companies that would allow you to order copies of these disks etc. He ended up creating over a 1000 disks this way. When cd-roms became a thing, you could order the whole collection on those. Those were strange times :)
Aminet was the most famous ftp-archive for amiga software. It was run by the same guy that made Brainfuck, Urban Müller. Rather than chronologically like fish disks, it was organized by topic, with readme’s for every file. You could upload to a staging area, and he’d put them in place. Much like fish disks, companies would print cd-roms with the latest from aminet for those not hooked up to the internets (or on 56k modems, which was most people).
Aminet was the most famous ftp-archive for amiga software. It was run by the same guy that made Brainfuck, Urban Müller. Rather than chronologically like fish disks, it was organized by topic, with readme’s for every file. You could upload to a staging area, and he’d put them in place. Much like fish disks, companies would print cd-roms with the latest from aminet for those not hooked up to the internets (or on 56k modems, which was most people).
Hah, I might not be the best to explain Amiga history, but I’ll do my best :) Fish disks were the main way to distribute public domain, open source, shareware etc. before the internet was wide-spread. People would send Fred Fish software, and he’d compile them into individual disks that people would copy. Magazines would have lots of companies that would allow you to order copies of these disks etc. He ended up creating over a 1000 disks this way. When cd-roms became a thing, you could order the whole collection on those. Those were strange times :)
Aminet was the most famous ftp-archive for amiga software. It was run by the same guy that made Brainfuck, Urban Müller. Rather than chronologically like fish disks, it was organized by topic, with readme’s for every file. You could upload to a staging area, and he’d put them in place. Much like fish disks, companies would print cd-roms with the latest from aminet for those not hooked up to the internets (or on 56k modems, which was most people).
aminet.net
.
» For those of us who were not part of Amiga culture, could you tell us what Aminet is / was? How did one get projects onto Fish Disks, what kind of software would you find on one, etc?
False (Esoteric Programming Language) > Important communication media - FALSE - Brainfuck etc
» For those of us who were not part of Amiga culture, could you tell us what Aminet is / was? How did one get projects onto Fish Disks, what kind of software would you find on one, etc?
aminnet
aminet.net
.
» For those of us who were not part of Amiga culture, could you tell us what Aminet is / was? How did one get projects onto Fish Disks, what kind of software would you find on one, etc?
False (Esoteric Programming Language) > Important communication media - FALSE - Brainfuck etc
Fish disk
Aminet was the most famous ftp-archive for amiga software.
Aminet is the world's largest archive of Amiga-related software and files. Aminet was originally hosted by several universities' FTP sites, and is now available on CD-ROM and on the web. According to Aminet, as of 1 April 2013, it has 80592 packages onlin
NoAccess
NoAccess
usenet
» For those of us who were not part of Amiga culture, could you tell us what Aminet is / was? How did one get projects onto Fish Disks, what kind of software would you find on one, etc?
aminnet
Aminet and Quota BBS > Gleb
Gleb J. Albert